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                    <text>24

Ijfofre of fjre

Of all the joys in life, none is greater than the joy of arriving on the
outskirts of Switzerland at the end of a long dusty day’s journey from
Paris. The true epicure in refined pleasures will never travel to Basle by
night. He courts the heat of the sun and the uninteresting monotony of
French plains,—then- sluggish streams and never-ending poplar-trees,—•
for the sake of the evening coolness and the gradual approach to the great
Alps which await him at the close of day. It is about Mulhausen that
he begins to feel a change in the landscape. The fields broaden into
rolling downs, watered by clear and running streams ; the green Swiss
thistle grows by river-side and cowshed ; pines begin to tuft the slopes of
gently rising hills ; and now the sun has set, the stars come out, first
Hesper, then the troop of lesser fights ; and he feels,—yes, indeed, there
is now no mistake,—the well-known, well-loved, magical fresh air that
never fails to blow from snowy mountains and meadows watered by
perennial streams. The last hour is one of exquisite enjoyment, and when
he reaches Basle, he scarcely sleeps all night for hearing the swift Rhine
beneath the balconies, and knowing that the moon is shining on its
waters, through the town, beneath the bridges, between pasture lands
and copses, up the still mountain-girdled valleys to the ice-caves where
the water springs. There is nothing in all experience of travelling like
this. We may greet the Mediterranean at Marseilles with enthusiasm;
on entering Rome by the Porta del Popolo, we may reflect with pride
that we have reached the goal of our pilgrimage, and are at last among
world-shaking memories. But neither Rome nor the Riviera wins our
hearts like Switzerland. We do not lie awake in London thinking of'
them; we do not long so intensely, as the year comes round, to
revisit them. Our affection is less a passion than that which we cherish
for Switzerland.
Why, then, is this ? What, after all, is the love of the Alps, and
when and where did it begin ? It is easier to ask these questions than to
answer them. The classic nations hated mountains. Greek and Roman
poets talk of them with disgust and dread. Nothing could have been more
depressing to a courtier of Augustus than residence at Aosta, even though
he found his theatres and triumphal arches there. "Wheiever classical
feeling has predominated, this has been the case. Cellini’s Memoir®,
written in the height of pagan Renaissance, well express the aversion which
a Florentine or Roman felt for the inhospitable wildernesses of Switzerland.
Dryden, in his dedication to The Indian Emperor,-says, “ High objects,
it is true, attract the sight; but it looks up with pain on craggy rocks and

�THE LOVE OE THE ALPS.

25

barren mountains, and continues not intent on any object which is wanting
in shades and green to entertain it.”
Addison and Gray had no better epithets than “rugged,” “horrid,”
and the like for Alpine landscape. The classic spirit was adverse to
ffittthnsiasm for mere nature. Humanity was too prominent, and city life
absorbed all interests,—not to speak of what perhaps is the weightiest
reason—that solitude, indifferent accommodation, and imperfect means of
travelling, rendered mountainous countries peculiarly disagreeable. It is
impossible to enjoy art or nature while suffering from fatigue and cold,
dreading the attacks of robbers, and wondering whether you will find food
and shelter at the end of your day’s journey. Nor was it different in the
Middle Ages. Then individuals had either no leisure from war or strife
with the elements, or else they devoted themselves to the salvation of
their souls. But when the ideas of the Middle Ages had decayed, when
improved arts of life had freed men from servile subjection to daily needs,
when the bondage of religious tyranny had been thrown off and political
liberty allowed the full development of tastes and instincts, when moreover
the classical traditions had lost their power, and courts and coteries became
too narrow for the activity of man; then suddenly it was discovered that
Nature in herself possessed transcendent charms. It may seem absurd
to class them all together ; yet there is no doubt that the French
devolution, the criticism of the Bible, Pantheistic forms of worship,
landscape-painting, Alpine travelling, and the poetry of Nature, are all
signs of the same movement—of a new Renaissance. Limitations of'
every sort have been shaken off during the last century, all forms have
been destroyed, all questions asked. The classical spirit loved to arrange,
model,, preserve traditions, obey laws. We are intolerant of everything
that is not simple, unbiassed by prescription, liberal as the wind, and
natural as the mountain crags. We go to feed this spirit of freedom
among the Alps. What the virgin forests of America are to the Americans
the Alps are to us. What there is in these huge blocks and walls of
granite crowned with ice that fascinates us it is hard to analyze. Why,
Seeing that we find them so attractive, they should have repelled our
ancestors of the fourth generation and all the world before them, is another
mystery. We cannot explain what rapport there is between our human
souls and these inequalities in the surface of the earth which we call
Alps. Tennyson speaks of—•
Some vague emotion of delight
In gazing up an Alpine height,—

and its vagueness eludes definition. The interest which physical science
has created for natural objects has something to do with it. Curiosity and
the charm of novelty increase this interest. No towns, no cultivated
tracts of Europe, however beautiful, form such a contrast to our London
life as Switzerland. Then there is the health and joy that comes from
exercise in open air; the senses freshened by good sleep ; the blood
quickened by a lighter and rarer atmosphere. Our modes of life, the

�26

THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

breaking down of class privileges, the extension of education, which con­
tribute to make the individual greater and society less, render the solitude
of mountains refreshing. Facilities of travelling and improved accom­
modation leave us free to enjoy the natural beauty which we seek. Our
minds, too, are prepared to sympathize with the inanimate world ; we
have learned to look on the universe as a whole, and ourselves as a part
of it, related by close ties of friendship to all its other members. Shelley’s,
Wordsworth’s, Goethe’s poetry has taught us this ; we are all more or
less Pantheists, worshippers of “ God in Nature,” convinced of the omni­
presence of the informing mind.
Thus, when we admire the Alps we are after all but children of the
century. We follow its inspiration blindly ; and, while we think ourselves
spontaneous in our ecstasy, perform the part for which we have been
trained from childhood by the atmosphere in which we live. It is this
very unconsciousness and universality of the impulse we obey which
makes it hard to analyze. Contemporary history is difficult to write ; to
dp.fiup. the spirit of the age in which we live is still more difficult ; to
account for “impressions which owe all their force to their identity with
themselves ” is most difficult of all. We must be content to feel, and not
to analyze.
Rousseau has the credit of having invented the love of Nature.
Perhaps he first expressed, in literature, the pleasures of open life among the
mountains, of walking tours, of the “ école buissonnière,'” away from courts,
and schools, and cities, which it is the fashion now to love. His bourgeois
birth and tastes, his peculiar religious and social views, his intense self­
engrossment, all favoured the development of Nature-worship. But
Rousseau was not alone, nor yet creative in this instance. He was but
one of the earliest to seize and express a new idea of growing humanity.
For those who seem to be the most original in their inauguration of
periods are only such as have been favourably placed by birth and educa­
tion to imbibe the floating creeds of the whole race. They resemble the
first cases of an epidemic which become the centres of infection and pro­
pagate disease. At the time of Rousseau’s greatness the French people
were initiative. In politics, in literature, in fashions, and in philosophy
they had for some time led the taste of Europe. But the sentiment which
first received a clear and powerful expression in the works of Rousseau
soon declared itself in the arts and literature of other nations. Goethe,
Wordsworth, and the earlier landscape-painters, proved that Germany
and England were not far behind the French. In England this love
of Nature for its own sake is indigenous, and has at all times been
peculiarly characteristic of our genius. Therefore it is not surprising that
our life, and literature, and art have been foremost in developing the sen­
timent of which we are speaking. Our poets, painters, and prose writers
gave the tone to European thought in this respect. Our travellers in
search of the adventurous and picturesque, our Alpine Club, have made of
Switzerland an English playground.

�THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

27

The greatest period in our history was but a foreshadowing of this.
To return to Nature-worship was but to reassume the habits of the
Elizabethan age, altered indeed by all the changes of religion, politics,
society, and science, which the last three centuries have wrought, yet still
in its original love of free open life among the fields and woods, and on the
sea, the same. Now the French national genius is classical. It reverts
to the age of Louis XIV., and Rousseauism in their literature is as true
an innovation and parenthesis as Pope-and-Drydenism was in ours. Asin
the age of the Reformation, so in this, the German element of the modern
character predominates. During the two centuries from which we have
emerged, the Latin element had the upper hand. Our love of the Alps is
a Gothic, a Teutonic, instinct ; sympathetic with all that is vague, infinite,
and unsubordinate to rules, at war with all that is defined and systematic
in our genius. This we may perceive in individuals as well as in the broader
aspects of arts and literatures. The classically-minded man, the reader of
Latin poets, the lover of-brilliant conversation, the frequenter of clubs and
drawing-rooms, nice in his personal requirements, scrupulous in his choice
of words, averse to unnecessary physical exertion, preferring town to
country life, cannot deeply feel the charm of the Alps. Such a man will
dislike German art, and, however much he may strive to be catholic in his
tastes, will find as he grows older, that his liking for Gothic architecture
and modern painting diminish almost to aversion before an increasing
admiration for Greek peristyles and the Medicean Venus. If in respect of
speculation all men are either Platonists, or Aristotelians, in respect of
taste, all men are either Greek or German.
At present the German, the indefinite, the natural, commands ; the
Greek, the finite, the cultivated, is in abeyance. We who talk so much
about the feeling of the Alps, are creatures, not creators of our cultus,—a
strange reflection, proving how much greater man is than men ; the
common reason of the age in which we five than our own reasons, its
constituents and subjects.
Perhaps it is our modern tendency to “ individualism ” which makes
the Alps so much to us. Society is there reduced to a vanishing point,—
no claims are made on human sympathies,—there is no need to toil in
yoke-service with our fellows. We may be alone, dream our own dreams,
and sound the depths of personality without the reproach of selfishness,
without a restless wish to join in action or money-making, or the pursuit
of fame. To habitual residents among the Alps this absence of social
duties and advantages is of necessity barbarizing, even brutalizing. But
to men wearied with too much civilization, and deafened by the noise of
great cities, it is beyond measure refreshing. Then again among the
mountains history finds no place. The Alps have no past nor present nor
future. The human beings who live upon their sides are at odds with nature,
clinging on for bare existence to the soil, sheltering themselves beneath
protecting rocks from avalanches, damming up destructive streams, all but
annihilated every spring. Man who is all things in the plain is nothing

�28

THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

here. His arts and sciences, and dynasties, and modes of life, and mighty
works, and conquests and decays, demand our whole attention in Italy or
Egypt. But here the mountains, immemorially the same, which were,
which are, and which are to be, present a theatre on which the soul breathes
freely and feels herself alone. Around her on all sides is God and Nature,
who is here the face of God, and not the slave of man. The spirit of the
world hath here not yet grown old. She is as young as on the first day;
and the Alps are a symbol of the self-creating, self-sufficing, self-enjoying
universe which lives for its own ends. For why do the slopes gleam with
flowers, and the hillsides deck themselves with grass, and the inaccessible
ledges of black rock bear their tufts of crimson primroses, and flaunting
tiger-lilies ? Why, morning after morning, does the red dawn flush the
pinnacles of Monte Rosa above cloud and mist unheeded ? Why does
the torrent shout, the avalanche reply in thunder to the music of the sun,
the trees and rocks and meadows cry their “ Holy, Holy, Holy ? ” Surely
not for us. We are an accident here, and even the few men whose
eyes are fixed habitually upon these things are dead to them the peasants
do not even know the names of their own flowers, and sigh with envy
when you tell them of the plains of Lincolnshire or Russian steppes.
But indeed there is something awful in the Alpine elevation above
human things. We do not like Switzerland merely because we associate
its thought with recollections of holidays and health and joyfulness.
Some of the most solemn moments of life are spent high up above
among the mountains, on the barren tops of rocky passes, where the
soul has seemed to hear in solitude a low controlling voice. It is
almost, necessary for the development of our deepest affections that some
sad and sombre moments should be interchanged with hours of merri­
ment and elasticity. It is this variety in the woof of daily life which
endears our home to us ; and, perhaps, none have fully loved the Alps
who have not spent some days of meditation, or it may be of sorrow,
among their solitudes. Splendid scenery, like music, has the power to
make “ of grief itself a fiery chariot for mounting above the sources of
grief,” to ennoble and refine our passions, and to teach us that our lives
are merely moments in the years of the eternal Being. There are many,
perhaps, who, within sight of some great scene among the Alps, upon the
height of the Stelvio, or the slopes of Murreu, or at night in the valley of
Cormayeur, have felt themselves raised above cares and doubts and miseries
by the mere recognition of unchangeable magnificence ; have found a deep
peace in the sense of their own nothingness. It is not granted to us every­
day to stand upon these pinnacles of rest and faith above the world. But
having once stood there, how can we forget the station ? How can we
fail, amid the tumult of our common life, to feel at times the hush of that
far-off tranquillity ? When our life is most commonplace, when we are ill
or weary in London streets, we can remember the clouds upon the moun­
tains we have seen, the sound of innumerable waterfalls, and the scent of
countless flowers. A photograph of Bisson’s, the name of some well-

�THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

29

¡rnnwn valley, the picture of some Alpine plant, rouses the sacred hunger
in our souls, and stirs again the faith in beauty and in rest beyond our­
selves which, no man can take from us. We owe a deep debt of gratitude
to everything which enables us to rise above depressing and enslaving
circumstances, which brings us nearer in some way or other to what is
eternal in the universe, and which makes us feel that, whether we live or
suffer or enjoy, life and gladness are still strong in the world. On
ihi« account, the proper attitude of the soul among the Alps is one of
reverential silence. It is almost impossible without a kind of impiety to
frame in words the feelings they inspire. Yet there are some sayings,
hallowed by long usage, which throng the mind through a whole summer s
day, and seem in harmony with its emotions—some portions of the Psalms
or lines of greatest poets, inai’ticulate hymns of Beethoven and Mendelssohn,
waifs and strays not always apposite, but linked by strong and subtle
chains of feeling with the grandeur of the mountains. This reverential
feeling for the Alps is connected with the Pantheistic form of our religious
sentiments to which we have before alluded. It is a trite remark, that
even devout men of the present generation prefer temples not made with
bands to churches, and worship God in the fields more contentedly than
in their pews. What Mr. Ruskin calls “ the instinctive sense of the divine
presence not formed into distinct belief ’ ’ lies at the root of our profound
veneration for the nobler aspects of mountain scenery. This instinctive sense
has been very variously expressed by Goethe in Faust’s celebrated Confes­
sion of Faith, by Shelley in the stanzas of Adonais which begin, “He is made
one with nature,” and by Wordsworth in the lines on Tintern Abbey. It is
more or less strongly felt by all who have recognized the indubitable fact
that religious belief is undergoing a sure process of change from the
dogmatic distinctness of the past to some at present dimly descried creed
of the future. Such periods of transition are of necessity full of discomfort,
doubt, and anxiety, vague, variable, and unsatisfying. The men in whose
spirits the fermentation of the change is felt, who have abandoned their
old moorings, and have not yet reached the haven for which they are
steering, cannot but be indistinct and undecided in their faith. The
universe of which they form a part becomes important to them in its
infinite immensity ; the principles of beauty, goodness, order, and law, no
longer definitely connected in their minds with certain articles of faith, find
symbols in the outer world; they are glad to fly at certain moments from
mankind and its oppressive problems, for which religion no longer provides
a satisfactory solution, to Nature, where they vaguely localize the spirit that
broods over us controlling all our being. Connected with this transitional
condition of the modern mind is the double tendency to science and to
mysticism, to progress in knowledge of the world around us, and to
indistinct yearnings after something that has gone away from us or lies
in front of us. On the one side we see chemists and engineers conquering
&amp;e brute powers of Nature, on the other jaded, anxious, irritable men
adrift upon an ocean of doubt and ennui. With regard to the former

�30

THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

class there is no difficulty : they swim with the stream and are not
oppressed by any anxious yearnings : to them the Alps are a playground
for refreshment after toil—a field for the pursuit of physical experiment.
But the other class complain, “ Bo what we will, we suffer; it is now too
late to eat and drink and die obliviously ; the world has worn itself to old
age; a boundless hope has passed across the earth, and we must lift our
eyes to heaven.” The heaven to which they have to lift their eyes is very
shadowy, far off, and problematical. The temple of their worship is the
Alps; their oracles are voices of the winds and streams and avalanches ;
their Urim and Thummim are the gleams of light on ice or snow ; their
Shekinah is the sunrise and the sunset of the mountains.
Of the two tendencies here broadly indicated, the former is represented
by physical research—the science of our day; the latter by music and land­
scape painting—the art of our day. There is a profound sympathy between
music and fine scenery: they both affect us in the same way, stirring
strong but undefined emotions, which express themselves in “ idle tears,”
or evoking thoughts “which lie,” as Wordsworth says, “ too deep fortears,”
beyond the reach of any words. How little we know what multitudes
of mingling reminiscences, held in solution by the mind, and colouring its
fancy with the iridescence of variable hues, go to make up the senti­
ments which music or which mountains stir. It is the very vagueness,
changefulness, and dreamlike indistinctness of these feelings which cause
their charm ; they harmonize with the haziness of our beliefs and seem to
make our very doubts melodious. For this reason it is obvious that unre­
strained indulgence in the pleasures of music or of scenery must destroy
habits of clear thinking, sentimentalize the mind, and render it more apt
to entertain embryonic ideas than to bring thoughts to definite perfection.
As illustrating the development of music in modem times, and the love
of Switzerland, it is not a little remarkable that the German style of music
has asserted an unquestionable ascendancy, that the greatest lovers of this
art prefer Beethoven’s symphonies to merely vocal music, and that harmony
is even more regarded than melody. That is to say, the vocal element of
music has been comparatively disregarded for the instrumental; and the art,
emancipated from its subordination to words, has become the most accurate
interpreter of all the vague and powerful emotions of yearning and reflec­
tive and perturbed humanity. If some hours of thoughtfulness and
seclusion are necessary to the development of a true love for the Alps,
it is no less essential to a right understanding of their beauty that we
should pass some wet and gloomy days among the mountains. The
unclouded sunsets and sunrises which often follow one another in September
in the Alps have something terrible. They produce a satiety of splendour,
and oppress the mind with the sense of perpetuity. I remember spending
such a season in one of the Oberland valleys, high up above the pine-trees,
in a little chalet. Morning after morning I awoke to see the sunbeams
glittering on the Eiger and the Jungfrau ; noon after noon the snowfields
blazed beneath a steady fire; evening after evening they shone like beacons

�THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

31

in the red light of the setting sun. Then peak by peak they lost the glow;
the soul passed from them, and they stood pale and garish against the
darkened sky. The stars came out, the moon shone, but not a cloud
sailed over the untroubled heavens. Thus day after day for several weeks
there was no change, till I was seized with an overpowering horror of
unbroken calm. I left the valley for a time ; and when I returned to it in
wind and rain I found that the partial veiling of the mountain heights
restored the charm which I had lost and made me feel once more at home.
The landscape takes a graver tone beneath the mist that hides the higher
peaks, and comes drifting, creeping, feeling, through the pines »upon their
slopes—white, silent, blinding vapour wreaths around the sable spires.
Sometimes the cloud descends and blots out everything. Again it lifts a
little, showing cottages and distant Alps beneath its skirts. Then it sweeps
over the whole valley like a veil, just broken here and there, above a lonely
chalet, or a thread of distant dangling torrent foam. Sounds, too, beneath
the mist are more strange. The torrent seems to have a hoarser voice and
grinds the stones more passionately against its boulders. The cry of
shepherds through the fog suggests the loneliness and danger of the hills.
The bleating of penned sheep or goats, and the tinkling of the cow-bells, are
mysteriously distant in the dull dead air. Then again, how immeasurably
high above our heads appear the domes and peaks of snow revealed through
chasms in the drifting cloud; how desolate the glaciers and the avalanches
in gleams of light that struggle through the mist! There is a leaden glare
peculiar to clouds, which makes the snow and ice more lurid. Not far from
the house where I am writing, the avalanche that swept away the bridge
last winter is lying now, dripping away, dank and dirty, like a rotting
whale. I can see it from my window, green beech-boughs nodding over it,
forlorn larches bending their tattered branches by its side, splinters of
broken pine protruding from its muddy cayes, the boulders on its flank, and
the hoarse hungry torrent tossing up its tongues to lick the ragged edge of
snow. Close by the meadows, spangled with yellow flowers, and red and
blue, look even more brilliant than if the sun were shining on them.
Every cup and blade of grass is drinking. But the scene changes ; the
mist has turned into rain-clouds, and the steady rain drips down, incessant,
blotting out the view.
Then, too, what a joy it is if the clouds break towards evening with a
north wind, and a rainbow in the valley gives promise of a bright to-morrow.
We look up to the cliffs above our heads, and see that they have just been
.powdered with the snow that is a sign of better weather. Such rainy
days ought to be spent in places like Seelisberg and Miirreu, at the edge of
precipices, in front of mountains, or above a lake. The cloud-masses
crawl and tumble about the valleys like a brood of dragons ; now creeping
along the ledges of the rock with sinuous self-adjustment to its turns and
twists; now launching out into the deep, repelled by battling winds, or
driven onward in a coil of twisted and contorted serpent curls. In the
midst of summer these wet seasons often end in a heavy fall of snow.

�32

.THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

You wake some morning to see the meadows which last night were gay
with July flowers huddled up in snow a foot in depth. But fair weatherj
does not tarry long to reappear. You put on your thickest boots and
sally forth to find the great cups of the gentians full of snow, and to
watch the rising of the cloud-wreaths under the hot sun. Bad dreams
or sickly thoughts, dissipated by returning daylight or a friend’s face,
do not fly away more rapidly and pleasantly than those swift glory-coated
mists that lose themselves we know not where in the blue depths of
the sky.
In contrast with these rainy days nothing can be more perfect than
clear moonlight nights. There is a terrace upon the roof of the inn at
Cormayeur where one may spend hours in the silent watches when all the
world has gone to sleep beneath. The Mont Chétif and the Mont de la
Saxe form a gigantic portal not unworthy of the pile that lies beyond.
For Mont Blanc resembles a vast cathedral ; its countless spires are
scattered over a mass like that of the Duomo at Milan, rising into one
tower at the end. By night the glaciers glitter in the steady moon ;
domes, pinnacles, and buttresses stand clear of clouds. Needles of every
height and most fantastic shapes rise from the central ridge, some solitary
like sharp arrows shot against the sky, some clustering into sheaves. On
every horn of snow .and bank of grassy hill stars sparkle, rising, setting,
rolling round through the long silent night. Moonlight simplifies and
softens the landscape. Colours become scarcely distinguishable, and forms,
deprived of half their detail, gain in majesty and size. The mountains
seem greater far by night than day—higher heights and deepei' depths,
more snowy pyramids, more beetling crags, softer meadows, and darker
pines. The whole valley is hushed, but for the torrent and the chirping
grasshopper and the striking of the village clocks. The black tower and
the houses of Cormayeur in the foreground gleam beneath the moon until
she reaches the edge of the firmament, and then sinks quietly away, once
more to reappear among the pines, then finally to leave the valley dark
beneath the shadow of the mountain’s bulk. Meanwhile the heights of
snow still glitter in the steady light : they, too, will soon be dark, until
the dawn breaks, tingeing them with rose.
But it is not fair to dwell exclusively upon the mere sombre aspect of
Swiss beauty when there are so many lively scenes of which to speak.
The sunlight and the freshness and the flowers of Alpine meadows form
more than half the charm of Switzerland. The other day we walked to a
pasture called the Col de Checruit, high up the valley of Cormayeur, where
the spring was still in its first freshness. Gradually we climbed by dusty
roads, and through hot fields where the grass had just been mown, beneath
the fierce light of the morning sun. Not a breath of air was stirring, and
the heavy pines hung overhead upon their crags, as if to fence the gorge
from every wandering breeze. There is nothing more oppressive than
these scorching sides of narrow rifts, shut in by woods and precipices.
But suddenly the valley broadened, the pines and larches disappeared,

�THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

83

fond we found ourselves upon a wide green semicircle of the softest meadows.
Little rills of water went rushing through them, rippling over pebbles,
rustling under dockleaves, and eddying against their wooden barriers.
Far and wide 11 you scarce could see the grass for flowers,” while on every
side the tinkling of cow-bells, and the voices of shepherds calling to one
another from the Alps, or singing at then- work, were borne across the
fields. As we climbed we came into still fresher pastures where the snow
had scarcely melted. There the goats and cattle were collected, and the
shepherds sat among them, fondling the kids and calling them by name.
When they called, the creatures came, expecting salt and bread. It was
pretty to see them lying near their masters, playing and butting at them
with their horns, or bleating for the sweet rye-bread. The women knitted
st,oe,kings, laughing among themselves, and singing all the while. As soon
as we reached them they gathered round to talk. An old herdsman, who
was clearly the patriarch of this Arcadia, asked us many questions in a
slow deliberate voice. We told him who we were, and tried to interest
him in the cattle-plague, which he appeared to regard as an evil very
unreal and far away,—like the murrain upon Pharaoh’s herds which one
reads about in Exodus. But he was courteous and polite, doing the
honours of his pasture with simplicity and ease. He took us to his chalet
and gave us bowls of pure cold milk. It was a funny little wooden house,
clean and dark. The sky peeped through its tiles, and if shepherds were
not in the habit of sleeping soundly all night long they might count the
setting and rising stars without lifting their heads from the pillow. He
told us how far pleasanter they found the summer season than the long
cold winter which they have to spend in gloomy houses in Cormayeur.
This indeed is the true pastoral life which poets have described,—a happy
summer life among the flowers, well occupied with simple cares, and
harassed by “no enemy but winter and rough weather.”
Very much of the charm of Switzerland belongs to simple things, to
greetings from the herdsmen, the “ Gluten Morgen ” and “ Guten Abend,”
that are invariably given and taken upon mountain paths ; to the tame
creatures, with their large dark eyes, who raise their heads one moment
from the pasture while you pass; and to the plants that grow beneath
your feet. It is almost sacrilegious to speak of the great mountains in
this hasty way. Let us, before we finish, take one glance at the multitude
of Alpine flowers.
The latter end of May is the time when spring begins in the high Alps.
Wherever sunlight smiles away a patch of snow the brown turf soon becomes
green velvet, and the velvet stars itself with red and white and gold and
blue. You almost see the grass and lilies grow. First come pale crocuses
and lilac soldanellas. These break the last dissolving clods of snow, and
stand up on an island, with the cold wall they have thawed all round them.
It is the fate of these poor flowers to spring and flourish on the very skirts
of retreating winter ; they soon wither—the frilled chalice of the soldanella
shrivels up and the crocus fades away before the grass has grown; the
vol. xvi.—no. 91.
8.

�84

THE LOVE OF THE ALPS.

sun, which is bringing all the other plants to life, scorches their tender
petals. Often when summer has fairly come, you still may see their
pearly cups and lilac bells by the' side of avalanches, between the chill
snow and the fiery sun, blooming and fading hour by hour. They have,
as it were, but a Pisgah view of the promised land, of the spring which
they are foremost to proclaim. Next come the clumsy gentians and yellow
anemones, covered with soft down like fledgeling birds. These are among
the earliest and hardiest blossoms that embroider the high meadows with
a drift of blue and gold. About the same time primroses and auriculas
begin to tuft the dripping rocks, while frail white fleurs-de-lis, like flakes
of snow forgotten by the sun, and golden-balled ranunculuses, join with
forget-me-nots and cranesbill in a never-ending dance upon the grassy
floor. Happy, too, is he who finds the likes of the valley clustering
about the chestnut boles upon the Colma, or in the beechwood by the stream
at Macugnaga, mixed with fragrant white narcissus, which the people of
the villages call “ Angiolini.” There, too, is Solomon’s seal, with waxen
bells and leaves expanded like the wings of hovering butterflies. But
these fists of flowers are tiresome and cold; it would be better to draw
the portrait of one which is particularly fascinating. I think that botanists
have called it saxífraga cotyledon; yet, in spite of its long name, it is a
simple and poetic flower. London pride is the commonest of all the
saxifrages ; but the one of which I speak is as different from London pride
as a Plantagenet upon his throne from that last Plantagenet who died
obscure and penniless some years ago. It is a great majestic flower, which
plumes the granite rocks of Monte Rosa in the spring. At other times of
the year you see a little tuft of fleshy leaves, set like a cushion on cold
ledges and dark places of dripping cliffs. You take it for a stone crop—
one of those weeds doomed to obscurity, and safe from being picked
because they are so uninviting—and you pass it by incuriously. But
about June it puts forth its power, and from the cushion of pale leaves
there springs a strong pink stem, which rises upward for a while, and then
comes down and breaks into a shower of snow-white blossoms. Far away
the splendour gleams, hanging, like a plume of ostrich-feathers, from the
roof of rock, waving to the wind, or stooping down to touch the water of
the mountain stream that dashes it with dew. The snow at evening,
glaring with a sunset flush, is not more rosy pure than this cascade of
pendent blossoms. It loves to be alone—inaccessible ledges, chasms
where winds combat, or moist caverns overarched near thundering falls,
are the places that it seeks. I will not compare it to a spirit of the
mountains or to a proud lovely soul, for such comparisons desecrate the
simplicity of nature, and no simile can add a glory to the flower. It
seems to have a conscious life of its own, so large and glorious it is, so
sensitive to every breath of air, so nobly placed upon its bending stem, so
gorgeous in its solitude. I first saw it years ago on the Simplon, feather­
ing the drizzling crags above Isella. Then we found it near Baveno, in a
crack of sombre cliff beneath the mines. The other day we cut an armful

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